Because now, I knew exactly where I was walking.
That evening, Adrian came to my apartment with champagne and a folder.
“Just routine paperwork,” he said casually. “Mortgage protection, future planning, emergency authorizations.
Mom says responsible couples prepare.”
Inside were documents granting him access to my accounts, medical records, and property decisions—especially if I were declared mentally unfit. Patricia had highlighted every signature line.
I let my hand tremble slightly.
Adrian noticed. “Don’t overthink it.
You’ve seemed anxious lately.”
“Have I?”
He nodded. “The crying, the forgetfulness…”
I hadn’t forgotten anything.
Over the next two weeks, their behavior grew more obvious.
Patricia began calling me unstable in front of others.
Adrian hid my belongings, then questioned my memory.
I received anonymous messages warning me I wasn’t safe.
He even switched my vitamins with sleeping pills and pretended to be concerned when I slept through entire mornings.
“You worried us,” he said gently.
Patricia added, “Maybe we should consult a doctor before the wedding.”
I lowered my eyes. “Maybe you’re right.”
They smiled, believing I was breaking.
In reality, I was collecting evidence.
The boutique had security cameras.
So did my apartment.
My phone recorded every conversation after that day.
My colleague Mara traced the anonymous messages back to Adrian.
My bank flagged Adrian’s attempt to access my savings with fake authorization.
But the final piece came from someone Patricia underestimated—her housekeeper, Mrs.
Lin.
She found a torn receipt in the trash: a consultation with a private psychiatric facility.
When I visited the clinic, the staff recognized Adrian immediately. He and his mother had already inquired about committing me after marriage.
The next day, Adrian suggested a family dinner.
“We should celebrate,” he said. “Then we’ll sign everything.”
I smiled.
“Let’s invite everyone.”
He didn’t realize who that included.
At the dinner, beneath a grand chandelier, Patricia announced it was time to sign the documents.
Adrian slid the folder toward me.
I picked up the pen.
Then I set it down.
“No.”
The room fell silent.
Patricia snapped, “This is your anxiety speaking.”
“My anxiety?” I repeated.
I placed a small speaker on the table and pressed play.
Her voice filled the room:
“We’ll take her apartment and her money… then send her away.”
Gasps echoed.
Adrian tried to deny it—but his own voice followed.
“She’ll sign. She trusts me.”
The doors opened.
My lawyer entered. Then detectives.
Then Mara. Then Mrs. Lin.
Patricia demanded they leave—but the detectives presented warrants.
Fraud.
Forgery. Financial exploitation. Harassment.
Even suspected poisoning.
Adrian panicked.
“The sleeping pills,” I said calmly. “You should’ve checked for fingerprints.”
He looked at me, desperate.
Not love.
Fear.
“You called me fragile,” I said. “You built a trap—and forgot I know how to dismantle one.”
Patricia lunged forward, but Mrs.
Lin stopped her.
“No more,” she said quietly.
Adrian was taken away first—pleading, blaming, unraveling.
Patricia followed after the lawsuits were announced.
Her debts, his gambling, their lies—everything was exposed.
As they were led away, she hissed, “You destroyed us.”
I glanced at my wedding shoes.
“No,” I said. “I revealed you.”
Six months later, those shoes sat in a glass case in my office.
Adrian pleaded guilty.
Mrs. Lin received a reward and a new life.
And me?
I kept my home.
I signed nothing.
I married no one.
Now, on quiet mornings, sunlight fills my apartment, and I sit by the window with my coffee—peaceful, free, untouchable.
I walked right to the edge of their trap.
Then I made them fall into it.
